Posted tagged ‘Caylee November 4’

Apparently, Casey Anthony is still unemployed and has no income, this according to the report from her most recent probation check-in. The good news is that it looks like she’s taking part in classes or therapy!

According to corrections officials, Anthony told her probation officer that she has had no source of income within the last 30 days and remains unemployed.

However, for the first time since her probation began, Anthony indicated that she is taking classes — though it remains unclear what type she is attending. Anthony checked a box on her probation form indicating that she is attending “educational, vocational… mental health, drug, alcohol, therapy or self-improvement” classes.

Attorneys representing Casey Anthony invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination 60 times during a deposition given in a civil suit against her, according to a transcript of the proceedings.

Anthony, who was acquitted in July of murder charges in Caylee’s death, is being sued in civil court by a woman named Zenaida Gonzalez.

Jackson said that Casey “asked me in coded language if I knew of anyone who was willing to be paid to kill someone.” Jackson also wrote that Casey asked about disposing of children and if he knew which types of poison were untraceable. Jackson said he met Casey and her ex-boyfriend Anthony Lazzaro through a pen pal.

New paperwork has been filed in the case of accused murderer Casey Anthony asking Judge Stan Strickland to throw out the murder charge against her because prosecutors, and an Orange County grand jury, put so little information in their indictment, she can’t defend herself.

“Instead of starting with the crime and figuring out who did it, the state has essentially started with who did it and is now trying to figure out what crime she might have committed,” the defense paperwork reads.

The indictment does not say how the child was killed or where, other than in Orange County.

As a consequence, Anthony’s attorneys say Circuit Judge Stan Strickland should throw out the indictment.

Casey Anthony‘s defense team says her murder indictment is so vague a Florida judge should dismiss charges she killed her young daughter, Caylee.

A motion filed Tuesday argues Orange County prosecutors have offered little in the way of hard evidence pointing to the 23-year-old Orlando, Fla., woman.

“Instead of starting with the crime and figuring out who did it, the state has essentially started with who did it and is now trying to figure out what crime she might have committed,” the motion said.

Lawyers for Casey Anthony have filed more motions in her murder case asking the court to throw out the murder indictment.

Lawyers filed new motions saying there isn’t enough information in the murder indictment for Anthony to defend herself so they want it thrown out. They are also trying to get the check fraud case dropped too claiming double jeopardy because she faces several counts of basically the same charge.